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Reorganizations of Gendered Labor During the COVID‐19 Pandemic: A Review and Suggestions for Further Research
Author(s) -
Leap Braden,
Stalp Marybeth C.,
Kelly Kimberly
Publication year - 2023
Publication title -
sociological inquiry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.446
H-Index - 51
eISSN - 1475-682X
pISSN - 0038-0245
DOI - 10.1111/soin.12488
Subject(s) - scholarship , pandemic , sociology , inequality , ambivalence , work (physics) , psychological intervention , covid-19 , gender studies , economic growth , economics , social psychology , psychology , medicine , mathematical analysis , mechanical engineering , mathematics , disease , pathology , psychiatry , infectious disease (medical specialty) , engineering
Across a range of countries, analysts have found that adaptations to the COVID‐19 pandemic often exacerbated previously existing labor inequalities between men and women in formal employment markets and households. This has been especially true for mothers with children in their households. Drawing on decades of sociological and feminist scholarship on labor, we suggest the following three strategies to strengthen ongoing research concerning pandemic‐induced reorganizations of gendered labor. First, ongoing research should expand considerations of gendered labor to account for more types of work and workers. Second, initial findings should be extended through the continued utilization of diverse methodologies to better account for the ambivalent experiences and meanings associated with emergent reorganizations of gendered work during the pandemic. Finally, ongoing research should pursue intersectional analyses of gendered labor that are sensitive to the complex dynamics of place and time. By expanding and strengthening considerations of gendered labor in these manners, ongoing analyses could generate more comprehensive, precise findings that better guide policy interventions meant to address the gendered inequities being sharpened by the pandemic. Foundational theoretical understandings of gendered labor and its associated inequalities could also be extended.

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